DDN
OSU starts fast, ends sloppy
By Doug Harris
Staff Writer
Sunday, September 03, 2006
COLUMBUS — Northern Illinois University coach Joe Novak said he was grateful for having played the nation's top-ranked football team — even after absorbing a 35-12 pounding Saturday — because it likely stripped his players of any illusions they may have had about their abilities.
Playing the preseason Mid-American Conference favorite, it seems, can have the same effect.
The Buckeyes stormed to touchdowns on their first four possessions — all in a mere 15 minutes, five seconds — before pressing the cruise button and losing their edge.
OSU quarterback Troy Smith tallied 149 of his 297 passing yards in the first quarter and connected on TD passes of 5 and 58 yards to Ted Ginn Jr. and 15 yards to Anthony Gonzalez.
But the Buckeyes lost fumbles twice inside the Huskies' 10-yard line. And the rebuilt defense was schooled by Chihuahua-sized tailback Garrett Wolfe, who rushed for 171 yards on 26 carries and had another 114 yards on five receptions.
"Sometimes you get an early lead and you get a little sloppy," OSU coach Jim Tressel said. "We can't have a holding penalty, which stalls the drive on offense. We can't have turnovers that keep us from scoring points. We can't miss tackles, and we missed some tackles. Despite how good Garrett Wolfe is, there are some guys we play in the next 11 weeks that are pretty darn good as well."
Turning point
After spotting the Buckeyes a 21-0 lead, the Huskies galloped to the OSU 11-yard line late in the first quarter.
But on second-and-9, linebacker Larry Grant stepped in front of a Phil Horvath pass and returned it 49 yards. Give the Huskies credit for showing grit the rest of the way, but the decision thereafter was never in doubt.
Stat of the game
The Buckeyes' scoring drives covered 66, 58, 57 and 20 yards (the latter after an 11-yard Huskie punt). Total time elapsed: 6:51.
Quote
"(OSU's) offense is going to score a lot of points," Novak said. "I voted for them as No. 1 in the preseason, and I'll vote for them as No. 1 again."
By the Numbers
40 Triumphs for the Buckeyes in their last 41 nonconference games in Ohio Stadium
28 Consecutive wins in home openers for OSU
21 All-time victories for the Buckeyes with just one loss against teams currently in the Mid-American Conference
8 Consecutive wins for Ohio State, dating to last season
4 Sacks by the Buckeyes for 24 yards in losses Saturday
3 Regular-season games last year in which OSU gave up at least 300 total yards, a figure topped Saturday by Northern Illinois
1 Opposing player to rush for more than 100 yards against OSU last season (Minnesota's Laurence Maroney, 127 on 25 carries).
1 Opposing player to rush for 100 yards against the Buckeyes this season (Northern Illinois' Garrett Wolfe, 171 on 26 attempts)
0 Sacks recorded Saturday by Northern Illinois
DDN
Two tailbacks stand out in Ohio St. opener
By Kyle Nagel
Staff Writer
Sunday, September 03, 2006
Thoughts and observations from Saturday's Ohio State-Northern Illinois football game, as I marvel at how sharp Buckeyes tailback Antonio Pittman looks in his suit:
1. Overall, good for Ohio State. Rushing defense on the corners shaky, lack of big plays late, but it's hard to argue with touchdowns on the first four possessions.
2. Larry Grant worked hard for his yards. Seriously, did you see Grant, the Ohio State linebacker, after he intercepted a Phil Horvath pass in the first quarter? I think they switched footballs to one weighted 37 pounds.
Officially it was a 49-yard return, and I'll bet he ran that distance in a shade less than 10 minutes.
3. Garrett Wolfe is slippery. If you like big rushing numbers, keep checking Northern Illinois box scores for the season. Wolfe, the NIU senior running back, looked like he covered his uniform in Vaseline.
If he spins, cuts, ducks, dodges and accelerates enough to run for 171 yards on a Buckeyes defensive line that looked impressive in the pass rush, imagine what he'll do to Buffalo, Indiana State and Ball State.
4. The OSU alumni band outnumbers the populations of some countries. It performed at halftime, including double versions of Script Ohio, to the wild applause of the Ohio Stadium crowd.
How important is the band at OSU? It has its own 24-page media guide.
5. It could be a long season in the Mid-American Conference. Northern Illinois is widely considered the best team in the MAC, and the league was once considered a dangerous opponent for its big-pass offenses.
Um ... yeah.
DDN
Buckeyes run well without QB Smith having to scamper
By Doug Harris
Staff Writer
Sunday, September 03, 2006
COLUMBUS — Ohio State managed to rack up 173 rushing yards against a Northern Illinois defense obsessed with stopping the run — a healthy sign.
Here's something else that bodes well: Dual-threat quarterback Troy Smith didn't contribute an inch.
Junior Antonio Pittman tallied 111 yards on 19 carries, and freshman Chris Wells rushed for 50 yards on 10 attempts.
Smith completed 18-of-25 passes for 297 yards and three touchdowns, but he ran just once for minus-1 yard.
OSU coach Jim Tressel said the Buckeyes' game plan didn't call for many designed runs from Smith, who picked apart the Huskie secondary seemingly at will.
"The one time I called a run, he looked like me running out there," Tressel joked, adding, "We didn't have any step-ups like we typically do in a ballgame, but we'll have plenty of those as the season goes."
Fumble depresses Wells
Wells drew roars from the crowd of 103,896 for several tackle-ripping runs, but his day was marred by a fumble at the Huskie 2-yard line late in the third quarter.
OSU didn't bring Wells to the post-game press conference, but Pittman said his fellow Akron native was berating himself.
"It happens," Pittman said. "I fumbled a lot as a freshman. That's one thing you can't do: get down on yourself. That's when you start losing confidence in your ability. You worry too much about holding on to the ball, you forget about doing what you do best.
"I told him not to worry about it."
Wolfe burns 'D'
The OSU defense was gashed twice for long gains on swing passes by the slithery Garrett Wolfe.
The 5-foot-7 senior scampered 31 yards behind perfect blocking on the game's second play, and he caught the Buckeyes in a blitz during a 65-yard jaunt late in the first quarter.
The nation's active leader in career rushing yards also had runs of 51 and 22 yards while finishing with 171 on 26 carries.
"Even though he's gotten a lot of preseason hype, he was better than the hype," OSU senior safety Brandon Mitchell said. "He's one of the best backs I've faced since I've been here.
"The field was wet and slippery. I was slipping around. The defense was slipping around. But he was making cuts like the field was dry."
The Buckeyes have a goal of giving up an average of 3.3 yards per carry, but they were knifed for 4.6 yards per attempt by the Huskies.
But the OSU defense still drew raves from Wolfe, despite its youth.
"They are fast and athletic," he said. "The two defensive tackles (David Patterson and Quinn Pitcock) cause lots of problems. ... It's Ohio State — there's not going to be too much of a drop-off in talent."
Freeman contributes
Outside linebacker Marcus Freeman stayed on the field through most of the game, but the Bucks alternated four players at the other two LB spots. True freshman Ross Homan and junior Larry Grant spelled starters John Kerr and James Laurinaitis. Freeman was credited with 6.5 tackles, second on the team to Mitchell's nine.
"I had some good spots, and some spots where I missed a few tackles," the sophomore from Wayne High School said.
Rule has impact
The new NCAA rules to shorten games this year seem to be working. OSU games last year averaged 132.3 plays, and Tressel said the NCAA average was 141.
But the Buckeyes and Huskies combined Saturday for just 126.
Buckeye bits
• On the first play of his OSU career — and the team's first offensive snap — redshirt freshman receiver Brian Hartline caught a 32-yard pass.
• Former Buckeye stars Mike Doss and Jonathan Wells, who play for the Indianapolis Colts, watched the game from the sidelines.